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The use of resighting data to estimate the rate of population growth of the snail kite in Florida

January 1, 2002

The rate of population growth (lambda) is an important demographic parameter used to assess the viability of a population and to develop management and conservation agendas. We examined the use of resighting data to estimate lambda for the snail kite population in Florida from 1997-2000. The analyses consisted of (1) a robust design approach that derives an estimate of lambda from estimates of population size and (2) the Pradel (1996) temporal symmetry (TSM) approach that directly estimates lambda using an open-population capture-recapture model. Besides resighting data, both approaches required information on the number of unmarked individuals that were sighted during the sampling periods. The point estimates of lambda differed between the robust design and TSM approaches, but the 95% confidence intervals overlapped substantially. We believe the differences may be the result of sparse data and do not indicate the inappropriateness of either modelling technique. We focused on the results of the robust design because this approach provided estimates for all study years. Variation among these estimates was smaller than levels of variation among ad hoc estimates based on previously reported index statistics. We recommend that lambda of snail kites be estimated using capture-resighting methods rather than ad hoc counts.

Publication Year 2002
Title The use of resighting data to estimate the rate of population growth of the snail kite in Florida
DOI 10.1080/02664760120108854
Authors V.J. Dreitz, J. D. Nichols, J. E. Hines, R.E. Bennetts, W.M. Kitchens, D.L. DeAngelis
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Journal of Applied Statistics
Index ID 5211163
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Patuxent Wildlife Research Center